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- <text id=89TT2767>
- <link 93TG0019>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: A New Item On The Agenda
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Endangered Earth Updates
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 60
- Special Report: Greening of Geopolitics
- A New Item On the Agenda
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The plight of the planet is finally serious international
- business
- </p>
- <p>By Glenn Garelik
- </p>
- <p> As George Bush prepared to attend Emperor Hirohito's
- funeral in February, a top aide alerted him to a problem that
- would once have been considered unworthy of presidential
- attention. Since Japanese furniture makers are eager for
- tropical hardwoods, officials in western Brazil hoped that Tokyo
- would finance the paving of a 500-mile road that would link the
- Amazon to a Peruvian highway, allowing lumberers to truck their
- timber directly to Pacific ports. But the plan, Deputy National
- Security Adviser Robert Gates cautioned the President, would
- subject the western Amazon to more of the slash-and-burn land
- clearing that has already devastated much of the rain forest's
- eastern regions. The torching releases into the air tons of
- carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases that are
- responsible for the greenhouse effect, which may cause global
- warming.
- </p>
- <p> During his meeting with Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita in
- Tokyo, Bush expressed concern about the project. Takeshita
- seemed prepared for the question. He stiffly denied involvement
- and assured Bush that his country would not fund the road. It
- was the first time that a U.S. President considered an
- ecological issue important enough to justify a tense moment in
- relations with the world's other economic superpower.
- </p>
- <p> The incident was all the more significant because it is
- part of a trend. In March British Prime Minister Margaret
- Thatcher, who in the mid-1980s denounced environmental activists
- as the "enemy within," convened an international meeting on the
- depletion of the atmosphere's ozone layer, which protects the
- earth from harmful solar radiation. That same month the Prime
- Ministers of Norway, France and the Netherlands chaired a
- conference that proposed creation of an international authority
- with the power to draft and enforce environmental regulations
- around the world.
- </p>
- <p> At the economic summit in Paris in July, the leaders of the
- seven largest industrial democracies devoted a third of their
- final communique to an appeal for "decisive action" to
- "understand and protect the earth's ecological balance." Just
- a month earlier, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
- Development, representing the major economic powers, had called
- upon "all relevant national, regional and international
- organizations" of its 24 member states to take a "vigilant,
- serious and realistic" look at "balancing long-term
- environmental costs and benefits against near-term economic
- growth."
- </p>
- <p> Nor is concern limited to the First World. A treaty signed
- in Basel, Switzerland, in March limits what poorer nations call
- toxic terrorism--use of their lands by richer countries as
- dumping grounds for industrial waste. And on Sept. 7 more than
- 100 member states of the nonaligned movement dispensed with
- their past denunciations of the U.S. and instead called for "a
- productive dialogue with the developed world" on "protection of
- the environment." As if heeding that appeal, on Sept. 11, at
- an international environmental conference in Tokyo, Japan's new
- Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu affirmed a pledge that his country
- would offer $2.25 billion to tackle pollution in the Third
- World.
- </p>
- <p> All this activity heralds the rise of environmentalism as
- a major factor in international relations. Concern for ecology,
- says William Nitze, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
- environment, health and natural resources, "has entered the
- policy mainstream." Another sign of the times: his father, elder
- statesman Paul Nitze, 82, a veteran of the cold war who has
- devoted much of his life to worrying about Soviet nuclear
- warheads, this year has thrown himself into the cause of
- fighting acid rain, which showers poisons from smokestacks onto
- trees and lakes far downwind.
- </p>
- <p> This new sense of urgency and common cause about the
- environment is leading to unprecedented cooperation in some
- areas. So it should. Ecological degradation in any nation
- almost inevitably impinges on the quality of life in others. For
- years, acid rain has been a major irritant in relations between
- the U.S. and Canada. Drought in Africa and deforestation in
- Haiti have resulted in waves of refugees, whose miseries and
- migrations generate tensions both within and between nations.
- From the Nile to the Rio Grande, conflicts flare over water
- rights. The teeming megacities of the Third World are time bombs
- of civil unrest. Sheer numbers of people overwhelm social
- services and natural resources. The government of the Maldives
- has pleaded with the industrialized nations to reduce their
- production of greenhouse gases, fearing the polar ice caps may
- melt and inundate the island nation.
- </p>
- <p> Even the good tidings of economic progress in the Third
- World bring with them the bad news of environmental peril and
- its potential for international discord. China, which accounts
- for 21% of the world's population, has the world's third
- largest recoverable coal reserves. If Beijing's current
- "modernization" campaign succeeds, the boom will be fueled by
- that coal, to the detriment of the planet as a whole. Some
- experts estimate that the developing world, which today produces
- one-fourth of all greenhouse gas emissions, could be responsible
- for nearly two-thirds by the middle of the next century. Notes
- Richard Benedick, chief U.S. negotiator of the 1987 Montreal
- Protocol on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer: "Third
- World states have served notice that they are simply not
- prepared to slow down their own already limping economic growth
- in order to help compensate for decades of environmental
- depredations caused largely by the industrialized world."
- </p>
- <p> Some developing countries may resist environmental action
- because they see a chance to improve their bargaining leverage
- with aid donors and international bankers. Notes a diplomat with
- the U.N. Environment Program: "Where before the poor never had
- a strategic advantage, now they have an ecological card.
- Ecologically, there's more parity than there ever was
- economically or militarily." Roald Sagdeyev, an influential
- Soviet scientist, is concerned that "in 20 or 25 years, the
- developed world could become an ecological hostage to the Third
- World."
- </p>
- <p> Thomas Pickering, the U.S. Ambassador to the U. N.,
- believes that just as the cold war between the East and the West
- seems to be winding down, "ecoconflicts" between the
- industrialized North and the developing South may, unless
- carefully managed, pose a comparable challenge to world
- peacemakers. At the U.N. last December, Soviet President Mikhail
- Gorbachev went so far as to compare the breakdown of the
- environment with the threat of nuclear war.
- </p>
- <p> President Bush, in his appearance before the General
- Assembly three weeks ago, called for "an international approach
- to urgent environmental issues," and earlier this year he
- persuaded the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
- to hold its next session, in February, in Washington. There,
- some 50 nations will begin preparations for a worldwide
- convention to limit production of gases that contribute to the
- greenhouse effect.
- </p>
- <p> At their September meeting in Wyoming, Secretary of State
- James Baker and U.S.S.R. Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
- promised U.S.-Soviet cooperation "to confront global
- environmental problems." There are predictions that the first
- Bush-Gorbachev summit, expected early next year, will be a
- "greener-than-thou" contest, with each leader trying to outdo
- the other in proclaiming his commitment to rescuing the planet.
- </p>
- <p> For most statesmen, the political potency of environmental
- issues first became apparent at home. In the Soviet Union,
- regional protests against the fouling of Lake Baikal, the Volga
- River and the Baltic shoreline have spurred demands for
- restructuring the society to increase government accountability
- and local control. During last year's presidential race in the
- U.S., Baker, then Bush's campaign manager, predicted from polls
- that his candidate could win votes by proclaiming himself an
- environmentalist. Now that he is Secretary of State, Baker is
- finding ways to elevate the issue from domestic politics to
- foreign policy. Days after taking office in January, he said of
- the environment, "We face more than simply a scientific problem.
- It is also a diplomatic problem."
- </p>
- <p> The State Department has established an Office of Global
- Change. Its functions include reporting to a newly formed
- interagency task force, which brings together diplomats from
- Foggy Bottom, officials from the White House, intelligence
- experts from the CIA and representatives of other major
- Government agencies. It is now working out options for next
- February's meeting of the IPCC.
- </p>
- <p> During the Reagan Administration, the Environmental
- Protection Agency and the Council on Environmental Quality were
- starved of both funds and presidential attention. That is
- changing. EPA head William Reilly, former director of the World
- Wildlife Fund and the Conservation Foundation, has more access
- to the Oval Office than any of his predecessors. The new
- chairman of the CEQ, Michael Deland, who was in charge of the
- EPA's Boston region, arrived at his desk across from the White
- House only two months ago, but his appointment has been widely
- hailed. Congress is expected to double the CEQ's funding for
- 1990, and the President has said he would like to see it doubled
- again by 1992.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Congress has been playing its own role in the
- greening of geopolitics. Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of
- Vermont, Republican Senator Bob Kasten of Wisconsin and
- Democratic Congressman David Obey of Wisconsin have promoted
- more foreign aid funding than ever before for environmental
- programs. In response to steady congressional pressure, the
- Treasury Department has adopted guidelines that require U.S.
- delegates to multilateral development banks to oppose funding
- for projects that would destroy tropical ecosystems.
- </p>
- <p> Yet this increased attention to the environment as a
- foreign policy and national security issue, however welcome, is
- only a gesture in the direction of what will be necessary to
- avert insoluble problems in the future. "The most formidable
- obstacles to action," says Benedick, are "the entrenched
- economic and political interests" of the world's most advanced
- nations. It is in those countries, warns Sir Crispin Tickell,
- Britain's Ambassador to the U.N., that "the pain of adjustment
- will be greatest."
- </p>
- <p> If the U.S., for example, asks others not to cut their
- forests, then it will have to be more judicious about cutting
- its own. If Americans wish to stem the supply of hardwoods from
- the fragile jungle or furs from endangered species, then they
- will have to stem demand for fancy furniture and coats. If they
- wish to preserve wildernesses from the intrusions of the oil
- industry, then they will have to find alternative sources of
- energy and use all fuels more efficiently.
- </p>
- <p> What all this requires is self-discipline on the part of
- the world's haves and increased assistance to the have-nots.
- Today a billion people live in a degree of squalor that forces
- them to deplete the environment without regard to its future.
- Similarly, their governments often are too crippled by
- international debt to afford the short-term costs of ecological
- prudence. Says Benedick: "Protecting the global environment is
- inextricably linked with eliminating poverty."
- </p>
- <p> In addition to launching an emergency campaign of debt
- relief, the advanced nations of the North must make available
- to the desperate nations of the South efficient new technologies
- that spare the environment while encouraging economic growth.
- Fortunately, help for the South should not mean only sacrifice
- in the North. The need for energy-efficient and environmentally
- useful technologies could create an enormous untapped market--one that several of the world's economic powers have already
- begun to explore. At the same time, there are ways for the South
- to clean up its own act. Some developing nations run up more
- than a third of their debt buying arms. Surely at least some of
- the $200 billion a year that poorer countries lavish on their
- military establishments could be better spent on saving the
- environment.
- </p>
- <p> William Ruckelshaus, former administrator of the EPA and
- now chief executive officer of Browning-Ferris Industries, a
- major waste-management firm, believes a historical watershed is
- at hand. If the industrialized and developing countries did
- everything they should, he says, the resulting change would
- represent "a modification of society comparable in scale to the
- agricultural revolution of the late Neolithic age and to the
- Industrial Revolution of the past two centuries."
- </p>
- <p> Just as environmentalism began as a local movement, it must
- continue to grow at the grass roots even as it gathers force in
- the chanceries and parliaments of the world. Individuals and
- nations alike must learn to think on a far broader scale about
- themselves, their needs and their interests or a global
- catastrophe will force them to do so.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-